Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://wikidata.dbpedia.org/resource/Q1588400> ?p ?o }
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- Q1588400 subject Q7028952.
- Q1588400 subject Q7690716.
- Q1588400 abstract "In psychology and social research, unmatched count, or item count, is a technique to improve through anonymity the number of true answers to possibly embarrassing or self-incriminating questions. It is very simple to use but yields only the number of people bearing the property of interest. It was introduced by Raghavarao and Federer in 1979".
- Q1588400 wikiPageExternalLink ai_72272305.
- Q1588400 wikiPageExternalLink nfm012v1.
- Q1588400 wikiPageWikiLink Q1193625.
- Q1588400 wikiPageWikiLink Q1436628.
- Q1588400 wikiPageWikiLink Q1436668.
- Q1588400 wikiPageWikiLink Q308859.
- Q1588400 wikiPageWikiLink Q367359.
- Q1588400 wikiPageWikiLink Q49918.
- Q1588400 wikiPageWikiLink Q7028952.
- Q1588400 wikiPageWikiLink Q7690716.
- Q1588400 wikiPageWikiLink Q814232.
- Q1588400 wikiPageWikiLink Q890690.
- Q1588400 wikiPageWikiLink Q9418.
- Q1588400 comment "In psychology and social research, unmatched count, or item count, is a technique to improve through anonymity the number of true answers to possibly embarrassing or self-incriminating questions. It is very simple to use but yields only the number of people bearing the property of interest. It was introduced by Raghavarao and Federer in 1979".
- Q1588400 label "Unmatched count".